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You have literally never heard of this shit until i just brought it up to you so how about you shut the frick up and stop pretending like you now what you are talking about?

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As a matter of fact, I had, but whatever. Otoh, you falsely claim that Dover is the originator of all these ideas, because you read it online- a ridiculous apologia I am also familiar with, as I have seen this claim enough times, in the form of low quality infographics shared to 'debunk' homosexual practice in ancient Greece.

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Well, again, this is not the first time I'm seeing this type of rhetoric, so I'm familiar with the claim, I'm familiar with the line of thought, etc. Although it wasn't nice of me to provoke you for your phrasing, it also wasn't nice that you're spreading a false narrative about a 'homosexual' spreading a 'homosexual agenda'.

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Jesus christ you are a cute twink

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:marseyshrug: I have tried to respond to every single one of your points in detail, while you dismissed my points, and you still don't admit that it's not true that it was made up by some gay agenda in the 1970s

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It was made up AND it was promoted heavily by the gay community. I messed up that it was two separate things but goddarn. you are such a goddarn redditor. All you do is go ummm source... source... do you have a source??? Then weasel out of it when given one. Go back to /r/askgaybros or where ever you come from

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It was promoted by the gay community, absolutely. It's also true that a certain narrative, not exactly accurate, formed out of this. But no, the texts about the Sacred Band were not made up, and it's not a new historiographical view :marseysquint:

Then weasel out of it when given one.

When did I do this?

You mean, when you quoted a secondary source that I am well aware of, as if Leitao is some unimpeachable authority? That I didn't even deny revisionary thought exists re. Sacred Band? This secondary source that, let me paraphrase what you said as a figure of speech, is "googled shit[sic] that agrees with you"? Unlike my literal primary sources? Lol there are plenty of articles which state otherwise, and which disagree with eg. Leitao.

Go back to /r/askgaybros or whereever you come from

We're not on Reddit anymore :marseydisagree:

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>When did I do this?

Oh, I think I get it. You mean, when you quoted a secondary source that I am well aware of, as if Leitao is some unimpeachable authority? That I didn't even deny revisionary thought exists re. Sacred Band? This secondary source that, let me paraphrase what you said as a figure of speech, is "googled shit[sic] that agrees with you"? Unlike my literal primary sources? Lol there are plenty of articles which state otherwise, and which disagree with eg. Leitao.

OK, here's a secondary source that disagrees with you (but again, I didn't even take a strong position on this, I just wanted to show it is quite reasonable to conclude re. the Sacred Band, and it's absurd to deny any kind of military homosexual practice in classical Greece):

The Thespians played a memorable military role at Thermopylae in 480, and male-on-male eros was to be most conspicuously enacted by the celebrated Theban Sacred Band of warriors in the fourth century.

A quite remarkable military innovation of this new Thebes was its 'Sacred Band' (hieros lochos). This was not the first elite, specialist troop to be raised in Greek history. Argos, for example, had anticipated Thebes in the late fifth century, and there is perhaps even a slight anticipatory hint in Herodotus, in the Theban '300' he referred to in the context of the battle of Plataea (Histories, 9.67). Even for Thebes, however, the Sacred Band was an unusual, and for Greece an unprecedented, social formation. The city was especially renowned – or, according to taste, excoriated – for its alleged (in myth) 'invention' of the partly pedagogic, partly social-bonding, partly sexual-emotional, social practice of pederasty (paiderastia), and for its actual, historical practice of male–male homosexuality. Paiderastia must be sharply distinguished from our 'pederasty'. It denoted... [NB: snipping this out because you now have to cope how pederasty wasn't paedophilic when it basically kind of was, at least in part]

Unlike in a Spartan pederastic relationship, such as that between Lysander and Agesilaus half a century earlier, both partners to the 150 pairing relationships that constituted the 300-strong Sacred Band of Thebes were, as noted, adult citizens; though it may be that there was a hierarchy of seniority within each and every pair – if for example the older of the couple was married and the younger was not. [NB: yes, probably, and as an extension of the Theban pederastic practice, and a continuation of the relationship, which already had various militaristic rituals- this is why it's an exception. To be clear, willy-nilly adult homosexuality wasn't exactly acceptable in classical Greece.]

-Cartledge, Paul. (2020). Thebes- The Forgotten City of Ancient Greece.

(nota benes added by me obviously)

OK... what now?

Do you want to make a point, or say that everything cited by me is googled shit[sic] searched for only by the criteria of compliance, whilst yours isn't, or what?

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